Niche-Seeking in Influence Maximization with Adversary

In hotly contested product categories dominated by a few powerful firms, it is quite common for weaker or late entrants to focus only on particular segments of the whole market. The rationale for such strategy is intuitive: to avoid direct confrontation with heavy-weight firms, and to concentrate in...

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Main Authors: LIOW, Long Foong, CHENG, Shih-Fen, LAU, Hoong Chuin
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2012
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/1494
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/2493/viewcontent/icec12_final.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-24932012-06-22T03:26:14Z Niche-Seeking in Influence Maximization with Adversary LIOW, Long Foong CHENG, Shih-Fen LAU, Hoong Chuin In hotly contested product categories dominated by a few powerful firms, it is quite common for weaker or late entrants to focus only on particular segments of the whole market. The rationale for such strategy is intuitive: to avoid direct confrontation with heavy-weight firms, and to concentrate in segments where these weaker firms have comparative advantages. In marketing, this is what people called “go niche or go home". The niche-building strategy may rely on “homophily", which implies that consumers in a particular market segment might possess certain set of attributes that cause them to appreciate certain products better (in other words, weaker firms would customize their products to target some particular market segments and not the mass market). On the other hand, the niche-building strategy may also rely on the network effect, which implies that consumers having social relationship would reinforce each other via their respective adoptions. In this case, weaker firms should recognize such inter-customer network and concentrate only on customers belonging to certain set of strategic clusters. In this paper, we present the model for building effective niche-seeking strategies. For simplicity, we assume that the adoption choice depends only on the network effects (in other words, a customer will choose the product that is chosen by the majority of her neighbor). The social network is directed, and there will be two firms, one with significantly more marketing budget than the other firm. Firms take turns making investment choices on which customer to convert. For both firms, their budgets are fixed over time and unused budget will not carry over to future time periods. With this model, we manage to show that a simple strategy based on the evaluation of individual customer's “value" can effectively identify and secure niches within randomly generated scale-free networks. We also show that such niche-building strategy indeed performs better in the long run than a myopic strategy that only cares about immediate market gains. 2012-08-07T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/1494 info:doi/10.1145/2346536.2346556 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/2493/viewcontent/icec12_final.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Computer Sciences E-Commerce
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Computer Sciences
E-Commerce
spellingShingle Computer Sciences
E-Commerce
LIOW, Long Foong
CHENG, Shih-Fen
LAU, Hoong Chuin
Niche-Seeking in Influence Maximization with Adversary
description In hotly contested product categories dominated by a few powerful firms, it is quite common for weaker or late entrants to focus only on particular segments of the whole market. The rationale for such strategy is intuitive: to avoid direct confrontation with heavy-weight firms, and to concentrate in segments where these weaker firms have comparative advantages. In marketing, this is what people called “go niche or go home". The niche-building strategy may rely on “homophily", which implies that consumers in a particular market segment might possess certain set of attributes that cause them to appreciate certain products better (in other words, weaker firms would customize their products to target some particular market segments and not the mass market). On the other hand, the niche-building strategy may also rely on the network effect, which implies that consumers having social relationship would reinforce each other via their respective adoptions. In this case, weaker firms should recognize such inter-customer network and concentrate only on customers belonging to certain set of strategic clusters. In this paper, we present the model for building effective niche-seeking strategies. For simplicity, we assume that the adoption choice depends only on the network effects (in other words, a customer will choose the product that is chosen by the majority of her neighbor). The social network is directed, and there will be two firms, one with significantly more marketing budget than the other firm. Firms take turns making investment choices on which customer to convert. For both firms, their budgets are fixed over time and unused budget will not carry over to future time periods. With this model, we manage to show that a simple strategy based on the evaluation of individual customer's “value" can effectively identify and secure niches within randomly generated scale-free networks. We also show that such niche-building strategy indeed performs better in the long run than a myopic strategy that only cares about immediate market gains.
format text
author LIOW, Long Foong
CHENG, Shih-Fen
LAU, Hoong Chuin
author_facet LIOW, Long Foong
CHENG, Shih-Fen
LAU, Hoong Chuin
author_sort LIOW, Long Foong
title Niche-Seeking in Influence Maximization with Adversary
title_short Niche-Seeking in Influence Maximization with Adversary
title_full Niche-Seeking in Influence Maximization with Adversary
title_fullStr Niche-Seeking in Influence Maximization with Adversary
title_full_unstemmed Niche-Seeking in Influence Maximization with Adversary
title_sort niche-seeking in influence maximization with adversary
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2012
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/1494
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/2493/viewcontent/icec12_final.pdf
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